Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated improved nose-to-lung aerosol drug delivery with controlled condensational growth methods using a mixer-heater developed to synchronize aerosol delivery with patient inhalation. The goal of this study was to develop a new mixer-heater that delivers aerosols with a transient flow profile similar to a sinusoidal breathing waveform. The mixer-heater consisted of a chamber with two blowers delivering aerosol during the inhalation cycle of three sinusoidal breathing profiles. The effects of breathing profiles and mode of condensational growth delivery were studied using two in vitro extrathoracic airway models (closed- and open-mouth options). In excipient enhanced growth (EEG) delivery mode, increasing peak exhalation breathing flow rate decreased the emitted dose from the mixer-heater using the closed-mouth model. The mean (SD) emitted doses were 92 (2)%, 77 (2)%, and 70 (2)%, with 23, 35, and 44 L/min peak exhalation breathing flow rates, respectively. Using the in vitro o...

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